Recording Details

Abstract

Entanglement renormalization is a coarse-graining transformation for quantum lattice systems. It produces the multi-scale entanglement renormalization ansatz, a tensor network state used to represent ground states of strongly correlated systems in one and two spatial dimensions. In 1D, the MERA is known to reproduce the logarithmic violation of the boundary law for entanglement entropy, S(L)~log L, characteristic of critical ground states. In contrast, in 2D the MERA strictly obeys the entropic boundary law, S(L)~L, characteristic of gapped systems and a class of critical systems. Therefore a number of highly entangled 2D systems, such as free fermions with a 1D Fermi surface, Fermi liquids and spin Bose metals, which display a logarithmic violation of the boundary law, S(L)~L log L, cannot be described by a regular 2D MERA. It is well-known that at low energies, a many-body system may decouple into two or more independent degrees of freedom (e.g. spin-charge separation in 1D systems of electrons). In this talk I will explain how, in systems where low energy decoupling occurs, entanglement renormalization can be used to obtain an explicit decoupled description. The resulting tensor network state, the branching MERA, can reproduce a logarithmic violation of the boundary law in 2D and, as additional numeric evidence also suggests, might be a good ansatz for the highly entangled systems with a 1D Fermi (or Bose) surface mentioned above. In addition, after recalling that the MERA can be regarded as a specific (discrete) realization of the holographic principle, we will see that the branching MERA leads to exotic holographic geometries.